The God Complex (TV story)

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The God Complex (TV story) was the eleventh episode in the sixth series of Doctor Who.

Synopsis

The Doctor, Amy and Rory investigate a hotel of horror where repeat business is low but the body count is high, where a mighty monster stalks the corridors and the rooms hold visions of angels, apes and creepy clowns. Who - or what - has brought them to this place? Can the Doctor solve the mystery before the residents check out in grisly style?

Plot

Lucy Hayward is writing about a monster and how it has made all of her former companions 'praise him' after they find their rooms. Soon she starts to praise him and the Creature kills her. The Doctor, Amy and Rory arrive in the hotel and the Doctor begins to investigate, certain that they are somewhere fascinating.

Rory shows him a picture of a Sontaran on the wall as well as others portraying a Judoon Captain and Lucy Hayward. They ring the front desk bell and almost gets hit by a chair leg held by a Rita, who is quickly followed Howie and Gibbis, a cowardly, mole-like alien from Tivoli. The Doctor quickly takes a liking to Rita, noting how clever she is and joking with Amy that he's firing her for Rita.

Rita says that each room contains 'a bad dream'. When the Doctor takes them to the Tardis, they find it missing. They reveal there is someone else, a man named Joe who they tied up because he was acting unstable. They take the Doctor to Joe's room, which is full of ventriloquist's dummies. Joe tells him that everyone here has a room, even the Doctor.

While searching for the missing Tardis or an exit, Howie finds his room which contains attractive girls who mock him for being nerdy and stuttering. The Doctor pulls him out of the room and they look for somewhere else to hide as a roaring beast nears. Rita and a captive Joe enter a room, which contains Rita's father, a doctor who berates her on her grades. Amy, Howie, and Gibbis enter a room full of Weeping Angels. The Doctor arrives and tells Amy to face her fear, and reveals that the angels aren't real.

Joe frees himself and runs out and the creature, described as a alien Minotaur, senses Joe's presence and kills him. Later, upon seeing Gibbis' reaction to the Angels, Amy realises that it wasn't her room, but his, as the Angels were the only creatures to invade Tivoli and try to kill rather than conquer the inhabitants. Gibbis however unnerves Amy by telling her that her room was still out there.

The Doctor devises a plan to confront the Minotaur by using a speaker broadcasting Howie's voice to trap the Minotaur in the same room as the Doctor. The Doctor talks to the Minotaur, who explains that the hotel is a prison that has trapped it for eons, and it wishes for this to end but the prison keeps it alive. It doesn't want to kill, it is running on instinct alone.

Meanwhile, terrified of the Minotaur, Gibbis lets Howie go, causing the Minotaur escapes and kill him. Amy finds her room; however Rita pulls her away from it before she can go in. Rita and the Doctor bond privately, with him offering to take her through time and space once they escape. However she has been hiding her own devotions to the Minotaur and seperates herself from the remaining survivors to avoid putting them in danger when the Minotaur comes for her.

The Doctor is distraught and full of grief after Rita dies, knocking over objects on the front desk and screaming loudly with rage. Later the Doctor realizes that only after people fell back on their faiths when confronted by fear were they killed by the Minotaur.

Joe was a gambler, who believed in luck; Rita was Muslim; Gibbis believes that his planet is going to be invaded again and Howie was a conspiracy theorist who believed the government controls everything. By breaking their faiths, it converts it into energy into a form that it can consume. Amy suddenly begins praising the Minotaur. The four of them run to Amy's room, revealing 7 year old Amelia Pond sitting on her suitcase staring at the stars waiting for the Doctor.

The Doctor kills the Minotaur by breaking Amy's faith in himself, her deepest belief. He admits his own faults to Amy, how most who come with him die or get hurt. That he is not a hero, but a mad man in a box. And it is time they saw each other for who they are. He was a fallible being, and she was Amy Williams.

With the Minotaur dying, the hotel reveals itself to be a massive holographic ship. By hacking the ship, the Doctor determines that the Minotaur is a relative of a Nimon, a species he's encountered. The Minotaur's kind need people to worship them in order to survive. Long ago it posed itself as a god to a race that advanced to the point where they realized what the Minotaur really was. They imprisoned it in an automated ship which fed it by scooping up people with strong faiths, keeping it alive for eons against its own will.

As it lay dying, the Minotaur tells the Doctor, "An ancient creature drenched in the blood of the innocent, drifting in space through an endless shifting maze. Such a creature, death would be a gift and accepted." After the Doctor consoles the Minotaur, it reveals with its dying breath, "I wasn't talking about myself."

The Doctor uses the Tardis to drop Gibbis off on his homeworld and takes Rory and Amy back to Earth, giving them a house and Rory's dream car as a goodbye present. While Rory is inside getting champagne, the Doctor explains that he can't keep putting them in danger, before departing. Rory comes out and Amy reveals to him that the Doctor is saving them.

Cast

Crew

to be added

References

Cultural references from the real world

  • Joe sings "Here comes a candle to light you to bed, here comes a chopper to chop off your head". This is from the centuries-old nursery rhyme Oranges and Lemons.

Foods and beverages

  • The Doctor now appears to enjoy apples.

Individuals

Races and species

Story notes

Ratings

  • UK Overnight: 5.2 Million

Myths

In Greek, the Minotaur as the Greeks imagined him, was a creature with the head of a bull on the body of a man or, as described by Roman poet Ovid, "part man and part bull". He dwelt at the center of the Creten Labyrinth, which was an elaborate maze-like construction built for King Minos of Crete and designed by the architect Daedalus and his son Icarus who were ordered to build it to hold the Minotaur. The Minotaur was eventually killed by the Athenian hero Theseus.

The term Minotaur derives from the Ancient Greek Μῑνώταυρος, a compount of the name Μίνως (Minos) and the noun ταύρος "bull", translating as "(the) Bull of Minos". In Crete, the Minotaur was known by its proper name, Asterion, a name shared with Minos' foster-father.

'Minotaur was originally a proper noun in reference to this mythical figure. The use of minotaur as a common noun to refer to members of a generic race of bull-headed creatures developed much later, in 20th-century fantasy genre fiction.

(Taken from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minotaur)

Filming locations

to be added

Production errors

If you'd like to talk about narrative problems with this story — like plot holes and things that seem to contradict other stories — please go to this episode's discontinuity discussion.
  • As the group climbed the stairs (all six of them), the edge of the TARDIS was visible. (To see this, look to the mid-right of the screen in this shot. The TARDIS' bottom can just be seen) (11:15)

Continuity

Home video releases

Series6.2DVD.jpg

The episode will be released on DVD and Blu-ray shortly after the airing of episode 13.http://doctorwhotv.co.uk/series-6-dvd-releases-15635.htm

External links

Footnotes